Paul strives for common ground with tea party

Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky made efforts this week to overcome a split between his father’s supporters and tea party backers in a move that could pay dividends for Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign.

Republican strategists say tea partyers and supporters of Mr. Paul and his father, Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, will be essential to the coalition they will need to defeat President Obama in November, but the two sides have been at odds over their choices of candidates in state primaries and over who will wield more influence within the Republican Party.

But when Rand Paul this week heaped lavish praise on the tea party, that diverse movement’s leaders said they saw signs of a denouement and a willingness to work together to boost Mr. Romney.

“There may be some of Ron Paul’s supporters who respect his values so much that they think that voting for anything less than Ron Paul would be a compromising of their values,” Tea Party Patriots founder and national coordinator Jenny Beth Martin said. “Rand Paul is saying you’re not compromising your principles — you’re getting yourselves a step closer to our principles by working with the tea party to help Romney.”

Ron and Rand Paul have enunciated essentially identical libertarian-conservative worldviews but have engaged in a delicate, nuanced and symbolic dance as the son Paul sets about forming an alliance of his own followers, his fathers’ and those of the tea party, said Paul boosters who have ties to the Romney campaign as well as to the tea party.

Party alive and well

The potential power realignment with the tea party was noted in a fundraising letter that Rand Paul sent on behalf of the campaign of fellow conservative Rep. Mark Neumann of Wisconsin. He praised the tea party and used “we” when describing his relationship with the movement.

“Remember all those news stories last year declaring ‘the tea party is dead’? Then look what happened,” Rand Paul said in the letter.

“We won in Indiana with Richard Mourdock, we’re on the verge of a huge win in Texas with Ted Cruz, we won in Nebraska with Deb Fischer, and we have one other huge fight looming on the horizon: Wisconsin,” Rand Paul wrote, just before Mr. Cruz, a tea party hero, trounced the establishment Senate candidate Tuesday in Texas’ Republican primary.

Rand Paul dubbed Mr. Neumann’s nomination battle with Tommy G. Thompson, the former governor of Wisconsin and former U.S. health and human services secretary, as the last “tea party vs. establishment” primary on the ticket.

“We’ll either nominate one of these establishment moderates, or we’ll have a taxpayer hero like Mark Neumann as our nominee. I think the choice is pretty clear,” he wrote.

The winner of the Wisconsin Republican primary will face off for the Senate against Rep. Tammy Baldwin for the seat of Sen. Herb Kohl, a four-term Democrat who is retiring.

Russ Walker, vice president of FreedomWorks, which took the lead in organizing the massive Sept. 12, 2010, tea party march on Washington, described Rand Paul’s words as a good sign for conservative voters eager to unseat Mr. Obama.

The tea party movement has been attempting to position itself as a major player in the GOP by winning seats on local and state party central committees and running tea party-backed candidates in GOP primaries. Ron Paul’s libertarian-conservative supporters, who call their collective effort the Liberty Movement, have similar aims.